Chapter 15 Gianni
Gianni
Sometimes, life gives you lemons. What you do with those lemons is what really matters.
Archie Popovich, for example, chose to squeeze them directly into someone else’s eyes.
By throwing George Gregory’s arm into my living room, Archie had made a point of letting me know he’d finally rid himself of the parasite infection known as George Gregory. He wanted Mikayla to hear about it. To feel it. To understand exactly what waited for her when she resurfaced.
He was sentimental like that. In a sadistic, performative sort of way.
I imagined him convincing himself it was clever—telling her he’d permanently retired her stepfather would make her reckless. Sloppy. Maybe grief would knock the sense out of her long enough for her to do something dramatic. Like show up at the funeral.
Personally—and I say this with all due humility—I thought advertising George’s execution would send her deeper underground, not running back into the light like a grieving idiot in a black dress.
But there was only one way to find out.
“Of all the fucking luck in the world.”
My cousin Atlas clapped me on the back hard enough to jolt air from my lungs and grinned like we were meeting for drinks instead of to discuss the early stages of a war.
“You bring chaos with you, cousin,” he added, amusement still in his voice as he poured himself a drink without offering me one. “I send you south for a quieter life and you come back with Russians, bullets, and a woman who apparently is a modern day Helen of Troy who’s ignited a war.”
I didn’t smile. I sat across from him and leaned forward, waiting.
Atlas Cavalho had never needed to announce himself.
He had inherited that gift early—the ability to enter a room and rearrange it without touching a single thing. He was my cousin, which meant very little to the rest of the world and everything inside our own.
Atlas was the don in waiting only on paper. In practice, he already ran Italy.
My uncle—his father—still held the title, still sat at the head of the table during formal gatherings, still signed documents and accepted tributes. Tradition mattered to him. Legacy mattered. But power? Power had already migrated. Quietly and efficiently, to his first born son.
Atlas believed in systems.
Italy under his influence didn’t run on fear alone.
Fear was inefficient and created mess. Atlas preferred obligation.
Structure. Long memory. He brokered peace where it served him and sanctioned violence where it taught the right lesson.
He never relied on impulse or emotion; every move feeding into a larger map only he seemed to see in full.
Under Atlas, Italy thrived. Ports ran on time. Trade routes stayed clean. Conflicts between families were resolved before they escalated into something messy enough to attract attention. The politicians smiled and shook hands and pretended not to notice how stable everything had become all at once.
Stability was Atlas’s signature. He kept the old rules where they worked and rewrote the ones that didn’t.
Women were no longer bargaining chips. Children were off-limits.
Blood feuds were contained or extinguished before they metastasized.
He believed chaos was the enemy of longevity, and he intended for the Cavalho name to outlive all of us.
Which was why, when Archie Popovich fired shots into my home and left a severed arm as a message, I went to Atlas.
Not because I needed help, but because I needed perspective.
Atlas didn’t react when I told him what had happened. He poured two fingers of whiskey into a glass, slid it across the table to me, and waited until I finished explaining before he spoke.
“Archie wants attention,” he said calmly. “And he’s obviously got yours.”
That was Atlas in a sentence. Strip away the noise. Identify the motive. Reduce the problem to its core.
He understood vendettas better than anyone I knew.
A rival family had once tried to undermine him publicly, had forced him into a corner where retaliation would have exposed weakness rather than strength.
Atlas had absorbed it. Waited. Learned everything he needed to know about the men involved.
Then he dismantled them so thoroughly that their grandchildren still spoke his name like he was a boogeyman.
That was why I trusted him.
I went to him because he understood restraint and recognized that sometimes the most dangerous move wasn’t violence—but patience.
He listened as I told him about Mikayla. About Gregory. About the debt and the wedding that never happened.
When I finished, Atlas studied me for a long moment. He wasn’t impatient or judging me, just weighing my words. Then he nodded once.
“Why not just give her back?”
“I could,” I admitted. “But he put bullets through my house. He made this thing between us personal. He threw the first grenade.”
Atlas’s gaze didn’t waver. “And you took his fiancée.”
“I didn’t know who she was,” I said flatly.
“But once you did,” he continued, voice calm, precise, “did you consider returning her?”
“You’re talking about her like she’s property,” I shot back. The irritation surprised even me.
Atlas didn’t rise to it. “Isn’t she?” he asked mildly. “Archie intends to marry her. You’re sheltering her. And whether you like it or not, you’re both using her to your advantage.”
I opened my mouth to argue, then closed it again.
“Don’t insult me by pretending the thought didn’t cross your mind,” Atlas went on. “Trading her for Provence. Ending an eighteen-month stalemate in one clean stroke.”
That was another thing about Atlas Cavalho—he saw three moves ahead while the rest of us were still congratulating ourselves for not tripping over the first.
My silence answered him.
I couldn’t honestly claim the idea hadn’t occurred to me. The moment I learned who she was, the calculus had begun. I had in my hand a pressure point that would knock Archie off balance and out of the bidding for the most valuable territory either of us had ever chased.
That had been the plan.
Maybe, somewhere along the way—after listening to her, after watching how she held herself together—I’d softened.
Maybe she’d complicated things. But the truth was ugly and unavoidable: my primary objective hadn’t changed.
I wanted Provence. And Mikayla Gregory had become the complication in that equation, whether I liked it or not.
Atlas watched my face as the realization settled.
“So,” he said quietly, “ask yourself this—who do you think actually loses if you play this wrong? You came to me for advice,” he continued. “Which tells me you already know this meeting has to happen.”
“I do.”
“Archie Popovich knows he can’t touch you without declaring open war. And he’s not ready for that. Not yet.”
“And if he is?” I asked.
Atlas smiled then—and there was nothing but certainty in the tight curl of his lips.
“Then it won’t matter what you decide,” he said. “Because he won’t be going to war with you. He’ll be going to war with us.”
That was the difference between Atlas and every other man in the room. When he said us, he meant it.
It wasn’t sentimentally or for show. If Atlas was in your corner, he was all in. He built foundations so solid that when conflict came—and it always inevitably did—there was nowhere for his enemies to stand.
When I left his house that night, his hand clasped my shoulder in a grip that carried more weight than any oath.
“Whatever happens, cousin,” he’d said, “know that I’m in your corner.”
That was why I went to Atlas.